Clancy’s 41-year-old Christmas tree lot is a tradition on a clock

[ad_1] The undeveloped lot at the corner of Seventh Avenue and Lawton Street is quiet and lifeless most of the year. But, at year’s end, pumpkins and Christmas trees line a dirt path, giant candy canes stand illuminated by strings of lights, and the whir of saws fills the air.  Opened in 1949, Clancy’s Pumpkins…

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The undeveloped lot at the corner of Seventh Avenue and Lawton Street is quiet and lifeless most of the year. But, at year’s end, pumpkins and Christmas trees line a dirt path, giant candy canes stand illuminated by strings of lights, and the whir of saws fills the air. 

Opened in 1949, Clancy’s Pumpkins and Christmas Trees has been at this corner of the Inner Sunset for 41 years. But perhaps not for much longer. Earlier this year, the Board of Education approved using the undeveloped land at 1620 Seventh Ave., owned by the SFUSD, as a potential site for teacher housing, which would move the school district closer to its goal of developing 550 educator housing units across San Francisco by 2030. 

It is unclear how long it will take for the project to break ground. But for Clancy’s, the clock is ticking. 

“I understand that they need housing. But we are kind of a staple here. There are not a lot of places like this anymore,” said Stephen Clancy who, with his wife, took over the business from his parents in 2020; they also run a second location at 2101 Sloat Blvd. outside the San Francisco Zoo. “We hope for the best.”

What would Clancy do when he can no longer sell Christmas trees at this lot? Clancy paused for a long time. “I try very hard not to think about it,” he said. “If we don’t have this, we’ll find another way to carry on.” 

A Christmas tree lot with signs for "Clancy's Christmas Trees" and "Real Christmas Trees," along with festive decorations and a "HERE" sign.
Clancy’s Pumpkins and Christmas Trees has been at the corner of 7th Avenue and Lawton Street for 41 years. Photo by Junyao Yang on Dec. 20, 2024.

As much as Clancy will miss the lot, customers seemed excited about the housing development. 

“Honestly, that would be great,” said Erin Nelson, who has lived in the Sunset for 19 years. “We love to get our pumpkins here and our Christmas trees, but the rest of the year, it just sits.”

And for most, Christmas is business as usual this year.

On a recent Friday, Clancy, in a flannel shirt and brown vest, was standing inside a giant cardboard box and putting away bags of tree flocking. The flocking, which is sprayed on, is used to turn trees into different colors: White is the most popular, in a city that almost never snows, but “Black was a big hit this year,” Clancy said. 

“It’s a fun business, but also a labor of love,” said Clancy. “All year, we are working towards the fall.”

During the months when the Clancy family is not working at the lot, they are busy farming the trees at Silverton, Oregon, and growing the pumpkins in Manteca, California. “We are also working on the farm equipment that we neglected in the holiday months,” he said.

A person in a beige outfit walks through a Christmas tree lot surrounded by trees and festive striped poles.
It was the end of the Christmas tree season, and Stephen Clancy is getting ready to wrap up this year’s work. Photo by Junyao Yang on Dec. 20, 2024.

Every year, Clancy’s sells a few thousand trees. To make sure they are fresh — a top request from customers — workers deliver them from Oregon at least once or twice a week. It’s easy to tell when a tree is dry — “when you pull on the needles and they come right off,” Clancy said, adding that old trees can “look a little dingy.”  

On Friday, just five days from Christmas, most trees have been sold, and Clancy and his crew are already putting tools away in cardboard boxes and the back of a truck.

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Source: missionlocal.org


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